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Mark Hallett

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  1234
Citations -  136876

Mark Hallett is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transcranial magnetic stimulation & Motor cortex. The author has an hindex of 186, co-authored 1170 publications receiving 123741 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Hallett include Government of the United States of America & Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.

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Plasticity revealed by transcranial magnetic stimulation of early visual cortex.

TL;DR: It is found that TMS‐induced sup‐pression progressively disappeared during three weeks of repeated TMS experiments, and the most likely explanation is a practice‐induced increase in neuronal activity in the early visual cortex.
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Neural correlates of blink suppression and the buildup of a natural bodily urge.

TL;DR: The consistency of urge model findings with prior studies investigating the suppression of blinking and other bodily urges, thoughts, and behaviors suggests that a similar investigative approach may have utility in fMRI studies of disorders associated with abnormal urge suppression such as Tourette syndrome and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
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Longitudinal fMRI study for locomotor recovery in patients with stroke.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the bihemispheric reorganization mechanism underlying locomotor recovery evolved from the ipsilateral (contralesional) primary sensorimotor cortex (SM1) activation at the subacute stage to the contralateral (ipsilesional) SM1activation at the chronic stage.
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Role of the sensorimotor cortex in tourette syndrome using multimodal imaging

TL;DR: Altered limbic input to the SMC and abnormal GABA‐mediated beta oscillations in theSMC may underpin some of the sensorimotor processing disturbances in TS and contribute to tic generation.
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Genome-wide association study in essential tremor identifies three new loci

Stefanie H. Müller, +56 more
- 20 Oct 2016 - 
TL;DR: A genome-wide association study in more than 2800 patients with essential tremor and more than 6800 controls of European descent is conducted, and three new loci associated with the disease are identified.